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Does Burn Peak contain stimulants like caffeine or synephrine and what are their amounts per serving?

Checked on November 24, 2025
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Executive summary

Available reporting is mixed about whether Burn Peak contains stimulants. Several product pages and marketing pieces for “Burn Peak” emphasize a non‑stimulant, BHB‑focused formula and explicitly state the product contains no caffeine or synthetic thermogenics (for example, the BurnPeak clinical release and some official pages) [1][2][3]. At the same time, multiple independent reviews and regional storefront or marketing copies list caffeine and green‑tea extract (a source of caffeine and catechins) among active ingredients and warn of stimulant‑type side effects [4][5][6].

1. Official claims: “no caffeine” on some clinical / PR materials

Burn Peak’s clinical‑style press materials and a GlobeNewswire / Yahoo Finance release for a 2025 observational study state the BurnPeak Triple‑BHB formula contains no caffeine or synthetic thermogenic compounds, framing the product as suitable for older adults concerned about stimulants [1][2]. Those documents describe the product as built around three BHB salts (magnesium, calcium, sodium) and promote two capsules daily as standard dosing [1][2].

2. Company websites: BHB plus plant extracts, variable transparency

Several official or semi‑official Burn Peak sites emphasize BHB salts and “plant‑based” ingredients; some pages highlight ingredients such as Haematococcus (astaxanthin) and BHB without listing stimulants explicitly [7][3]. Other regional Burn Peak landing pages mention that caffeine and green tea extract can increase thermogenesis and state the formula includes “natural caffeine and amino acids” or green tea extract among active components [6][8]. These differences suggest multiple marketing variants or inconsistent ingredient disclosure across domains [7][8][6].

3. Independent reviews and consumer‑facing content: caffeine and green tea listed; side‑effect warnings

Several third‑party reviews and consumer PDFs assert Burn Peak contains green tea extract and caffeine, and they warn of stimulant‑related side effects (jitters, insomnia), advising morning dosing or starting with half a dose [4][9][5][10]. BetterHealthDecision’s review explicitly links reported side effects to “stimulant content,” calling out caffeine and green tea extract as thermogenic ingredients [5].

4. No consistent, authoritative ingredient amounts found in reporting

None of the sources supply a clear, verifiable label listing per‑serving milligrams of caffeine or synephrine for Burn Peak. Press pieces and reviews either assert presence/absence or list ingredient names, but do not provide measured amounts per capsule or serving [1][4][5]. Therefore, available sources do not mention exact caffeine or synephrine mg/serving for Burn Peak.

5. Synephrine (bitter orange) context — what to expect if it were present

Independent scientific sources summarize typical synephrine research and dosing: studies showing metabolic effects often use p‑synephrine doses in ranges such as ~2–3 mg/kg body mass for exercise effects or absolute doses explored from ~20–100 mg in trials, and the compound is commonly sold as “bitter orange” extracts in weight‑loss supplements [11][12][13]. If Burn Peak contained synephrine, those are the study ranges you would compare against; however, Burn Peak ingredient lists in the available reporting do not provide any synephrine‑amount data [11][13]. Available sources do not mention whether Burn Peak contains synephrine at all.

6. Conflicting messages — possible reasons and consumer implications

The conflict between PR saying “no caffeine” and reviews or regional pages listing caffeine/green‑tea extract suggests one of three possibilities in current reporting: (a) different product formulations marketed under similar brand names or domains, (b) marketing/affiliate pages making assumptions or generalizing typical “fat burner” ingredient lists, or (c) inconsistent ingredient disclosure on alternate sellers’ pages [1][4][8][3]. For consumers, that means you cannot assume stimulant‑free status without seeing the actual Supplement Facts on the bottle you buy; several reviewers explicitly recommend starting slow because of reported stimulant effects [5][10].

7. What a cautious buyer should do next

Request or inspect the actual Supplement Facts label for the batch you will buy; look for “Caffeine (mg) per serving,” “Green Tea Extract (standardized EGCG) — mg,” and any listing of Citrus aurantium or p‑synephrine with mg amounts. If the seller’s page or customer service cannot produce that label, treat information as incomplete — several watchdog and review pieces flag missing ingredient transparency and product authenticity concerns [14][15][16].

Limitations: this assessment uses only the supplied documents; none of those sources provide a definitive per‑serving mg figure for caffeine or synephrine in Burn Peak, so I do not assert specific amounts beyond what the cited items say [1][4][5].

Want to dive deeper?
What are all active ingredients listed on Burn Peak's supplement facts label and their doses per serving?
Does Burn Peak contain proprietary blends that hide exact stimulant amounts?
Are there reports of adverse events linked to caffeine or synephrine in Burn Peak users?
How does Burn Peak's stimulant content compare to other fat-burner supplements on the market?
Are there regulatory warnings or recalls concerning synephrine or caffeine in supplements like Burn Peak?